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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fabry disease
is a rare X-linked lysosomal storage disease leading to systemic involvement, mainly through GL-3 endothelial deposition. Initial symptoms may occur during childhood (acroparesthesia, angiokeratoma), prior to adulthood complications, i.e. renal, ocular, cerebral, neurological and cardiovascular involvement. An early diagnosis of the disease may be challenging because of a frequent atypical clinical presentation. Indeed, independent of conservative treatment (pain, proteinuria, chronic renal failure, arterial
hypertension
, heart failure, etc), enzyme therapy using recombinant alpha-galactosidase (agalsidase) has provided a safe pathophysiological approach, leading to significant organ functional improvement (mainly kidney and heart) and improved quality of life, which parallels tissue GL-3 clearance. Such a treatment is safe and efficient but its biweekly intravenous administration is still uncomfortable, so that further alternative therapeutic approaches may be encouraged.
...
PMID:[Current management of Fabry disease]. 1737 18
A 38-year-old male Caucasian with
Fabry disease
presented with angiokeratomas and tortuous conjunctival and retinal vessels. Additionally, the patient showed characteristic skin lesions of psoriasis and seborrheic dermatitis. His past medical history revealed anhidrosis, acral paresthesias, myocardial infarction, phlebothrombosis,
hypertension
, antithrombin III deficiency, factor V Leiden disease, chronic obstructive lung disease, tinnitus, diarrhea, recurrent abdominal pain, headache, and depressive mood. He was treated with intravenous substitution of the deficient enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. Possible future options in treatment of
Fabry disease
are discussed.
...
PMID:Fabry disease: case report with emphasis on enzyme replacement therapy and possible future therapeutic options. 1761 Jun 10
Fabry disease
(FD), the second most common type of lysosomal storage disease (LSD), is one of 41 disorders characterized by accumulation of substances normally degraded within lysosomes. It is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by a deficiency of lysosomal alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A). The locus for human alpha-Gal A is located on the Xq22 chromosome. Most FD mutations are confined to a single family. Although FD is an X-linked disorder, up to one third of female carriers develop clinical manifestations of the disease. It typically presents during infancy or adolescence with crisis of neuropathic pain (acroparesthesia), angiokeratomas, and asymptomatic corneal lesions. As Gb3 deposition progresses, clinical manifestations occur in other organs. Patients typically die in the fourth or fifth decade of life due to cardiac, renal or cerebrovascular complications. Usually, there is diffuse deposition of glycosphingolipid in the renal glomeruli, tubules, interstitium, and vasculature. Clinically, the renal disease manifests with
hypertension
, microscopic hematuria (rare), moderate proteinuria, which can be in the nephrotic range, and lipiduria. End-stage renal disease can be treated with either dialysis or transplantation. Thegene for (x-Gal A was cloned and sequenced, which eventually led to production of enzyme for therapeutic use by either recombinant DNA technology or gene activation.
...
PMID:Fabry kidney disease. 1765 9
Fluorescence microlymphography (FML) is an almost atraumatic technique used to visualize the superficial skin network of initial lymphatics through the intact skin of man. Visualization was performed with an incident light fluorescence microscope following subepidermal injection of minute amounts of FITC-dextran 150,000 using microneedles. Emanating from the bright dye depot, the surrounding network of microvessels is filled, documentation performed by photography or video film. In congenital Milroy lymphedema, a lack of microlymphatics (aplasia) is typical while in other primary lymphedemas and in secondary lymphedema after mastectomy or irradiation of proximal lymph nodes, the network remains intact but the depicted area is enlarged. Lymphatic microangiopathy characterized by obliterations of capillary meshes or mesh segments develops in phleboedema with trophic skin changes, progressive systemic sclerosis and
Fabry's disease
. In lipedema, lymphatic microaneurysms are stained. Microlymphatic pressure may also be measured using FML. For this purpose, glass micropipettes are inserted into the capillaries by means of a micromanipulator and pressure is determined by the servo-nulling technique. Normal subjects produced significantly lower pressure (7.9 +/- 3.4 mmHg) compared to patients with primary lymphedema (15.0 +/- 5.1 mmHg, p<0.001). This characteristic lymphatic
hypertension
may be improved by complex physiotherapy or local application of prostaglandins. Additionally, a modification of the FML procedure can be used to measure lymphatic capillary flow velocity in controls and patients. FML is suited to confirm the clinical diagnosis of lymphedema, contributes to distinguish among various forms of edema, and is useful in clinical research. In addition, FML has also become a tool for experimental animal studies including the depiction of gastric microlymphatics, the measurement of flow velocity in the naked mouse tail, and in evaluation of lymphangiogenesis in a model of Milroy disease.
...
PMID:Fluorescence microlymphography: diagnostic potential in lymphedema and basis for the measurement of lymphatic pressure and flow velocity. 1785 15
We report a case of a 52-year-old male who has been diagnosed for many years because of chronic diarrhea and proteinuria with concomitant gradually progressing chronic kidney disease. Diagnostic problems associated with the initial diagnosis of amyloidosis as a primary cause of the patient's complaints have been described.
Anderson-Fabry disease
(AFD) was suspected following comprehensive evaluation that resulted eventually in the exclusion of amyloidosis and the echocardiographic examination showing hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the patient with no history of
hypertension
and aortic valve defects. The diagnosis of AFD was confirmed by results of enzymatic tests.
...
PMID:Anderson-Fabry disease: diagnostic problems from gastrointestinal manifestations to the diagnosis of kidney disease. 1914 May 72
Little is known about the effects of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in kidney transplant recipients with
Fabry disease
. Clinical characteristics of transplant recipients in the
Fabry
Outcome Survey (FOS) were therefore examined in patients with
Fabry disease
with or without ERT. Of the 837 European patients in FOS (March 2006), 34 male patients and two female patients had received kidney transplants. Mean age at transplantation was 37.6 +/- 10.9 years, mean time since transplantation was 7.7 +/- 6.4 years, median estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was 44.4 ml/min/1.73 m(2), and median proteinuria was 296 mg/24 h. Of 27 patients with baseline data, 59% had
hypertension
, 74% had left ventricular hypertrophy, 22% had cardiac valve disease, 30% had arrhythmia, and 22% had transient ischaemic attacks and 15% stroke. Twenty patients (74%; two female patients, 18 male patients) were receiving ERT with agalsidase alfa. At enrollment or at the start of ERT, median eGFRs were 59 and 35 ml/min/1.73 m(2) (P = 0.05) and median proteinuria levels were 240 and 420 mg/24 h (not significant) in treated and untreated patients respectively. Renal function remained stable in patients receiving ERT. In conclusion, agalsidase alfa is well tolerated in patients with
Fabry disease
who have undergone renal transplantation.
...
PMID:Kidney transplantation in patients with Fabry disease. 1920 91
Originally described by Brock and Teare, today hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is clinically defined as left (or right) ventricular hypertrophy without a known cardiac or systemic cause, such as
systemic hypertension
,
Fabry's disease
or aortic stenosis.Also appreciated today is the enormous genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity of this disease with more than 300 mutations over more than 24 genes, encoding various sarcomeric, mitochondrial and calcium-handling proteins, all as genetic causes for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.Phenotypically, the disease can vary from negligible to extreme hypertrophy, affecting either the left and/or right ventricle in an apical, midventricular or subaortic location.Left ventricular false tendons are thin, fibrous or fibromuscular structures that traverse the left ventricular cavity. Recently, a case report was presented where it was shown that such a false tendon, originating from a subaortic location, was responsible for striking ST-segment elevation on the surface electrocardiogram.In this case report, a case is presented where such a subaortic tendon led to the classic echocardiographic appearance of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, thus in the assessment of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, this entity needs to be excluded in order to prevent a false positive diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:The subaortic tendon as a mimic of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 1957 50
In the absence of
hypertension
, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the most common cause of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). However, it has been reported that up to 3% of males with unexplained LVH have
Fabry disease
, an X-linked disorder of glycophospholipid metabolism that is due to a deficiency in the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A). A 44-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with palpitations. He had a history of chronic renal failure diagnosed at age 33 followed by kidney transplantation performed at our institution 2 years later, as well as long-standing hypohidrosis. His medications included prednisolone (5 mg daily), mycophenolate mofetil (1,000 mg, bid), and cyclosporine (150 mg, bid). On hospital day two, an echocardiogram demonstrated increased left ventricular wall thickness (septal wall thickness of 28 mm, posterior wall thickness of 20 mm). Diastolic dysfunction was noted on transmitral flow patterns and tissue Doppler imaging. The patient was found to have low plasma alpha-Gal A activity. A previously reported H46R missense mutation was detected in his alpha-Gal A gene and the patient was subsequently diagnosed with
Fabry disease
.
...
PMID:A case of fabry cardiomyopathy. 1994 40
Fabry's disease
is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder resulting from alpha-galactosidase A deficiency. Although ischemic stroke is recognized as an important manifestation of
Fabry's disease
, hemorrhagic stroke is considered to be rare. Here, we report our recent clinical experience with three hemizygous male patients with
Fabry's disease
who developed cerebral hemorrhage. One patient had classic type
Fabry's disease
with p.Ala37Val mutation and others had cerebrovascular variant with p.Glu66Gln mutation. Degeneration of the cerebral small arteries secondary to deposition of glycosphingolipids and aging, in addition to
hypertension
and antiplatelet/anticoagulant agents, are considered to be contributing factors for hemorrhage.
Fabry's disease
is frequently associated with not only ischemic but also hemorrhagic stroke, especially in elderly patients.
...
PMID:Cerebral hemorrhage in Fabry's disease. 2030 Jan 24
Echocardiography has a leading role in the routine assessment and diagnosis of hypertrophic ventricles. However, the use of M-mode echocardiography and measurement of global left ventricular function may be misleading. Traditionally, systolic function was thought to be preserved in patients with hypertrophic myopathies until the late stages of the disease, and hypertrophic myopathies were thought to affect the myocardium more diffusely than ischemic heart disease. Ultrasound deformation imaging, either by Doppler myocardial imaging or speckle tracking, provides more-sensitive detection of regional myocardial motion and deformation than standard echocardiography. Basic and clinical studies that apply these techniques have revealed early, often subclinical impairment in systolic function. This information allows the detection and treatment of myocardial dysfunction at an early stage, which is of high clinical importance. Physiological hypertrophic remodeling seen in athletes differs from pathological myocardial hypertrophy, which can be caused by compensatory reactive hypertrophy owing to pressure overload in patients with aortic stenosis or
hypertension
, as well as amyloidosis,
Fabry disease
or Friedreich ataxia. Each of the etiologies associated with hypertrophy demonstrate distinct regional changes in myocardial deformation, which allows identification of the underlying processes, and will improve the assessment and follow-up of patients with hypertrophic myopathies.
...
PMID:The role of echocardiographic deformation imaging in hypertrophic myopathies. 2045 40
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